I try to view problems as opportunities. If it’s raining outside, that’s training in the rain. Snowing? Awesome, snow running! Too hot? High-temperature training. Too cold? Low-temperature training. I’m too tired? Fatigue training. I also try to look at things from what I call a “mediative” point of view. So let’s say I’m out running my regular route but it’s cold, windy, raining, etc, and I feel miserable. I try to remember how I felt running the same route on a beautiful day and bring my mind back to that state. Or if I’m fatigued, I try to remember a day when what I was doing felt easy and set myself the challenge of trying to regain that mindset. Again, it’s about turning problems into opportunities: fatigue is an opportunity for fatigue-mastery. It helps to take an interest in the mental element of training, sports, etc, so you can think of mastering mental adversity as part of your training.
There’s also the option of trying to find a method of exercise that avoids as many of those willpower-draining hassles as possible. If you can, that is.
I remember once playing around with ‘choosing to be happy’, some years ago, but had completely forgotten about the trick until now. Certainly worth a shot.
I try to view problems as opportunities. If it’s raining outside, that’s training in the rain. Snowing? Awesome, snow running! Too hot? High-temperature training. Too cold? Low-temperature training. I’m too tired? Fatigue training. I also try to look at things from what I call a “mediative” point of view. So let’s say I’m out running my regular route but it’s cold, windy, raining, etc, and I feel miserable. I try to remember how I felt running the same route on a beautiful day and bring my mind back to that state. Or if I’m fatigued, I try to remember a day when what I was doing felt easy and set myself the challenge of trying to regain that mindset. Again, it’s about turning problems into opportunities: fatigue is an opportunity for fatigue-mastery. It helps to take an interest in the mental element of training, sports, etc, so you can think of mastering mental adversity as part of your training.
There’s also the option of trying to find a method of exercise that avoids as many of those willpower-draining hassles as possible. If you can, that is.
I remember once playing around with ‘choosing to be happy’, some years ago, but had completely forgotten about the trick until now. Certainly worth a shot.